Hudson v. Smith

133 S.W. 486, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 412, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 121
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 21, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 133 S.W. 486 (Hudson v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hudson v. Smith, 133 S.W. 486, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 412, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 121 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

This is an appeal from a decree of the District Court dissolving a temporary writ of injunction procured by the appellant Hudson against appellees, T. H. and W. B. Smith, partners under the firm name of Smith & Son, G. W. Robinson, justice of the peace of precinct No. 2 of Uvalde County, and J. C. Bean, sheriff of Terrell County, to restrain them from enforcing and collecting a judgment rendered in said justice’s precinct in favor of Smith & Son against Hudson for the sum of $16, upon which execution was placed in the hands of J, C. Bean as sheriff of Terrell • County and levied upon a talking machine and records for its use, the property of defendant in the execution, of the value of $47.50. Judgment was also asked that said judgment be declared a nullity.

*413 A general demurrer was sustained to plaintiffs’ bill, and a decree entered dissolving the injunction and denying him the relief sought.

The substance of plaintiffs’ allegations in their bill is: That on February 19, 1908, Smith & Son sued plaintiff and the Sanderson Drug Co., before 6. W. Bobertson in the Justice Court of precinct Ho. 2 of Hvalde County for $16 alleged to be due them for wood alleged to have been delivered by them to plaintiff and the Sanderson Drug Company; that plaintiff is now, and was at the time the suit was brought, the sole owner of said Drug Company and doing business under 'its name in Sanderson, which is precinct Ho. 1, Terrell County, where he then and ever since has resided and has had his domicile and that plaintiff made no agreement, nor executed any written contract to be performed by him in Uvalde County, nor did the alleged cause of action, upon which said judgment was rendered, accrue there.

That when said suit was called for trial, the plaintiff herein, at his earliest opportunity and before making any announcement therein, presented his plea of privilege to be sued in the county of his residence, which plea alleged, in substance, that he was not at the time the suit was instituted, nor at the time of the service of process, nor at the time of filing the plea, a resident of Uvalde County, but was at all , times before mentioned a resident of precinct Ho. 1 of Terrell County; and that the alleged cause of action did not accrue in Uvalde County and that he did not execute any contract in writing to be performed in said county connected with the purchase of said wood; and that none of the exceptions to exclusive venue in the county of his residence mentioned in articles 1194 and 1585 of the Bevised Statutes existed in said case, plaintiff herein asking in said plea the court in which said suit was pending to transfer it to the Justice Court of precinct Ho. 1 of Terrell County for trial; and that said plea was signed and duly sworn to by him; that plaintiff insisted before said court on his plea of privilege, and introduced evidence in support thereof, proving all the facts alleged therein; but that the court overruled the same, tried the case and rendered judgment against him, on April 7, 1908, for the sum of $16; that within a seasonable time after the judgment was rendered, plaintiff filed and presented to the court his motion for a new trial, which was overruled.

That on March 19, 1909, plaintiffs in said case (J. M. Smith '& Son) caused an execution to be issued on said judgment, directed to and placed in the hands of the sheriff of Terrell County (J. C. Bean), who on April 14 levied the same on a certain Victor talking machine and fifty records used thereon, valued by the sheriff at $47.50, the property of plaintiffs, and advertised said property for sale; that said execution has (not) the certificate of the county clerk of Uvalde attached thereto, showing that G. W. Bobinson, who issued the same, is an acting justice of the peace of said county; nor is there any certified copy of the costs taxed against defendants in execution attached thereto, nor does the execution show the style and number of the cause in which it was issued.

The plaintiff is not now, nor when said suit was instituted in the *414 Justice Court, justly indebted to J. ML Smith & Son in any sum of money whatsoever; that their claim upon which said judgment was rendered had been fully paid and satisfied before the suit was brought.

That if defendant, J. C. Bean, is permitted to sell the property levied upon by virtue of said execution, plaintiff will be unjustly deprived of the value of the same and the benefits and profits of the same to his business, the value being $50 and the benefits and profits of same to plaintiff’s business $25; that on April 27, 1908, defendants Smith & Son, knowing said judgment was invalid, caused an abstract thereof to be made, filed and recorded in the office of the county clerk of Terrell County, in which county plaintiff resides and is engaged in the drug business and owns considerable property," both real and personal, for the purpose of harassing plaintiff, injuring his business by casting the shadow of a lien upon his property, to his damage in the sum of .$100.

That plaintiff has no adequate remedy at law to prevent the sale of the property levied upon, nor prevent the enforcement of said judgment, which is void by reason of the fact that the Justice Court wherein it was rendered had no jurisdiction of the person of this plaintiff as defendant in said suit.

Plaintiff’s bill closes with a prayer for a writ of injunction against all the defendants restraining them from further proceedings under said judgment and execution; that defendant J. C. Bean, as sheriff, be required to return to the District Court of Terrell County,- in which this suit is brought, the execution under which the levy was made, and that the same be filed by the clerk among the papers in this case; that defendant G. W. Bobinson, justice of the peace of precinct No. 2 of Uvalde County, be required to transmit all original papers in said cause No. 194, entitled J. M. Smith & Son v. W. B. Hudson and Sanderson Drug Co., on file in his court, together with a transcript of all orders, judgments and entries made in said cause, to the clerk of the District Court of Terrell County, to be by him filed among the papers in this case; that upon final hearing that the judgment of said Justice Court be annulled and set aside, and that no further executions be issued thereon, and that the injunction be perpetuated; that the record of the abstract of said judgment, alleged in plaintiff’s petition, be canceled and .declared null and void; that plaintiff have judgment against defendants J. C. Bean and T. H. and W. Y. Smith jointly and severally for the sum of $75 actual damages caused by filing and recording the abstract of said judgment, for costs of suit, and general relief in law and equity.

Had the whole relief thus prayed for been granted, it would have been wholesome, indeed, to plaintiff, though somewhat harassing to defend-, ants. Plaintiff would have jingled one hundred and seventy-five dollars in his pocket, obtained from defendants by a legerdemain that would have palsied the hand of equity.

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.W. 486, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 412, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hudson-v-smith-texapp-1910.